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Who manages home garden agrobiodiversity? : patterns of species distribution, planting material flow and knowledge transmission along the Corrientes River of the Peruvian AmazonPerrault-Archambault, Mathilde January 2005 (has links)
Agrobiodiversity constitutes an essential resource for traditional rural populations. Home gardens are "hotspots" of agrobiodiversity and important loci of in situ conservation efforts. This study seeks to understand the factors affecting gardeners' choices and to assess the accessibility of planting material in rural communities of the Peruvian Amazon. Household surveys and garden inventories conducted in 15 villages of the Corrientes river (n = 300), and case studies in three of these villages (n = 89), allowed to describe the local and regional patterns of garden agrobiodiversity and the structure of planting material exchange networks. Analyses reveal a strong link between species diversity and both household cultural and socioeconomic characteristics, and village ethnicity and size. Planting material flows primarily through matrilineal bonds, from advice-givers to advice-seekers, from old to young and from rich to poor. Farmers with exceptional species diversity, propensity to give and/or expertise are identified and their role in the conservation of cultivated plants is assessed. Expertise is not found to be as closely related to high species diversity as expected, but knowledge and planting stock dissemination go hand-in-hand.
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Home gardens, cultivated plant diversity, and exchange of planting material in the Pacaya-Samiria National Reserve area, northeastern Peruvian AmazonLerch, Natalie Corinna. January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Who manages home garden agrobiodiversity? : patterns of species distribution, planting material flow and knowledge transmission along the Corrientes River of the Peruvian AmazonPerrault-Archambault, Mathilde January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Influence of biomass burning aerosol on land-atmosphere interactions over AmazoniaZhang, Yan 18 July 2005 (has links)
The impacts of biomass burning smoke on local rainfall and the structure of the atmospheric boundary layer have been actively studied in recent years. However, whether the large-scale biomass burning in the later dry season over Amazonia Region could influence the dry-to-wet transition season have not been examined. Previous observations have shown that the substantial increase of rainfall from dry to wet season over Amazonia are actually caused by small changes of the atmospheric thermodynamic structure relative to those over other monsoon regions. Consequently, the onset date of wet season can vary greatly as influenced by external or internal anomalous forcings. Thus, it is possible that the transition of the atmospheric thermodynamic structure and circulation from dry to wet season is also sensitive to the impacts of biomass burning smoke. To test this hypothesis, we have forced RegCM3 model with direct radiative forcing of smoke inferred from MODIS for the transition season (August to November). The comparison with control run helps us to examine the direct and semi-direct influences of smoke on the transition from dry to wet season. Our preliminary results show that the direct and semi-direct forcings of smoke could significantly influence the rainfall and related atmospheric and land surface conditions during the transition. However, these changes are sensitive to the prescribed vertical distribution of the aerosols.
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Carbon and nitrogen cycling in the Peruvian Andean AmazonTownsend-Small, Amy, 1976- 12 August 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Climatic impact of Amazon deforestation: A study of underlying mechanism through simple modeling.Zeng, Ning. January 1994 (has links)
An intermediate level model for tropical climatology including atmosphere-land-ocean interaction is developed. The model contains basically linearized steady state primitive equations with simplified thermodynamics. A simple hydrological cycle is also included. Special attention has been paid to land surface processes in attempting to study climate change caused by Amazon deforestation. In comparison with previous simple modeling work on tropical climatology or anomaly, the present model is more sophisticated in the sense that it predicts all the important meteorological variables with little input, while being computationally simple. The modeled tropical climatology appears to be realistic. The model generally better simulates the ENSO anomaly compared to many previous simple model simulations. We provide analysis of model results and discuss model deficiencies and possible improvements of the model. The climatic impact of Amazon deforestation is studied in the context of this model. Model results show a much weakened Atlantic Walker/Hadley circulation as a result of the existence of a strong positive feedback loop in the atmospheric circulation system and the hydrological cycle. The regional climate is very sensitive to albedo change and sensitive to evapotranspiration change. The pure dynamical effect of surface roughness on convergence is small, but the surface flow anomaly displays intriguing features. Analysis of the thermodynamic equation reveals the balance among convective heating, adiabatic cooling and radiation largely determines the deforestation response. The model provides a plausible mechanism for the common results of many GCM simulations. Studies of the consequences of hypothetical continuous deforestation suggest that the replacement of forest by desert may be able to sustain a desert-like climate. When a simple mixed layer ocean model is coupled with the atmospheric model, the results suggest a 1 °C decrease in SST gradient across the equatorial Atlantic ocean in response to Amazon deforestation. The magnitude of the decrease depends on the coupling strength.
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The Non-Random Selection of Medicinal Plants Theory: a Case Study of a Kichwa Community in the Ecuadorian AmazonUnknown Date (has links)
The non-random selection of medicinal plants theory, which states that
phylogeny affects the selection of medicinal plants, was proposed by Daniel Moerman
to indirectly prove that traditional medicinal systems are rational and based in part by
the therapeutic efficacy of plants. The logic of this theory is that because members of
a taxonomical group share similar characteristics, some groups will be more
medicinal and will be over-used in pharmacopoeias, while other groups bereft of
secondary metabolites and therapeutic potential will be under-used medicinally. To
test this theory, Moerman linearly regressed the total number of medicinal plants per
family against the total number of plants per family present in an area and examined
residual values to find over-used and under-used medicinal plant families. The
method has been praised for its simplicity. Nonetheless, shortcomings have been
noted and criticized, inspiring researchers to propose new procedures to test for
phylogenetic biases in pharmacopoeias. Negative Binomial regression and
examination of studentized residuals, the method used in this investigation,
ameliorates the original one with a few corrections, conserving the simplicity and solving for all the criticized flaws. Also, this study incorporated different
sociodemographic factors to determine if the intracultural homogeneity of traditional
knowledge affects the results of the non-random selection of medicinal plants theory
analysis. By testing Moerman’s theory, which is one of Ethnobotany’s major theories,
this investigation is in agreement with the call to have more hypothesis-driven
research within a theoretical framework to continue to advance the Ethnobotany field. / Includes bibliography. / Thesis (M.S.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2018. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
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Fish assemblage organization in the Amazon River floodplain : species richness, spatial distribution and recruitment processesPetry, Paulo 25 May 2000 (has links)
The composition and distribution of fish assemblages was examined in a
floodplain lake system in the Amazon basin. Quantitative samples were
collected during the 1992-1993 flooding season at Marchantaria Island, Solimoes
River. A total of 25,819 specimens representing 8 orders, 30 families, 101
genera and 139 species of fish were collected. Analysis of species richness
distribution among 7 vegetation strata showed that vegetated sites had higher
species richness than unvegetated sites. Stands of Paspalum repens had the
most diverse fish fauna. Canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) was used to
investigate relationship between fish assemblages and 16 environmental
variables. CCA revealed that dissolved oxygen, water transparency, water depth
and aquatic vegetation structure were significantly related to fish assemblage
organization. The results suggest that physiological adaptations to hypoxia and
habitat complexity play a major role in the organization of these assemblages.
The morphology, ontogenetic development, shape variability and deposition of
otolith microincrements are described for floodplain serrasalmin fishes.
Serrasalmin otoliths were similar to other ostariophysan, nevertheless their
shape was species-specific. Elliptical Fourier analysis showed that Mylossoma
aureum lapilli were highly variable in shape when compared to closely related
species. PCA and discriminant function analysis indicated that two distinct forms
of lapillus can be recognized for M. aureum, and intra-species variation was
higher than inter-species variation. Otolith microincrement analysis was tested
for these fishes, and microincrement deposition validation showed that Piaractus
brachipomus deposits otolith increments on a daily basis. Patterns of spatial
distribution, growth and mortality characteristics of larvae and juvenile were
examined for M. aureum inhabiting the Marchantaria Island floodplain. Otolith-derived
birth date reconstruction showed that M. aureum spawning season
extended from late November to March, and peak larvae recruitment to the island
occurred in mid-December. Larvae and juveniles had different spatial
distributions in relation to habitat usage. Instantaneous growth coefficients (g)
varied from 0.0197(d�����) to 0.265(d�����) among cohorts. Early-season cohorts had
wider otolith microincrements and higher instantaneous growth coefficients than
late-season cohorts. Mortality estimated by the decline of loge (abundance)
regressed on age indicated that cohort-specific instantaneous mortality varied
significantly among cohorts, ranging from 0.027(d�����) (2.6%/d) to 0.103(d�����)
(9.7%/d). / Graduation date: 2001
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What are the mechanisms responsible for the wet season onset over tropical South AmericaLi, Wenhong, January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2004. Directed by Rong Fu. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 119-131).
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River trading in the Peruvian Amazon : market access and rural livelihoods among rainforest peoplesCohalan, Jean-Michel. January 2007 (has links)
Access to markets is increasingly regarded in development circles as a critical factor in determining livelihood choices in peasant economies. In the northeastern Peruvian Amazon, a multitude of river transporters and market intermediaries based in the central city of Iquitos provide essential services and market opportunities for remote peasant producers across the region. Using a multi-scalar, multi-method approach involving extensive fieldwork in the Peruvian Amazon, this research (re)assesses the meanings and implications of "remoteness" and "connectedness" for rural peasants. At the regional scale, I examine the functional heterogeneity of river trading networks and marketing agents. Given the high-risk/high-transaction-cost environment, river trading is found to be expensive for producers and traders alike. High costs are exacerbated by the low gross returns of rural production (mainly food and natural building materials). Thin or missing markets for credit, labour, land and insurance increase the hardships associated with limited access to product markets. Regional findings are complemented with a comparative livelihoods analysis in two remote communities of the Alto Tigre River that benefit from differential access to oil-labour. My study reveals that differential access to labour has significant impacts on the livelihood strategies of working households. However, given limited access to external markets, cash-income from oil-labour is found to offer limited opportunities for growth. In sum, the research proposes insights for advancing the debate on livelihoods and poverty in the Peruvian Amazon.
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